Page:Zinzendorff and Other Poems.pdf/6

6 up as freshly in the trodden vale, as on the cliff where the cloud settles.

Should it be objected that too great a proportion of them are elegiac, the required apology would fain clothe itself in the language of the gifted Lord Bacon:—"If we listen to David's harp, we shall find as many hearse-like harmonies, as carols; and the pencil of Inspiration hath more labored to describe the afflictions of Job, than the felicities of Solomon."

L. H. S.

, Conn. Sept. 1835.